Jeannette Eyerly

"Her
persistent passion has always been a better place for all." - Mary M. Kennedy, 2005

Jeannette Eyerly, an Iowan for more than 90 years,
is an award-winning author of books for children and teens and an
advocate for mental health. First published at age eight, she wrote
twenty books of fiction for young people, two books of poetry and
co-authored a book on writing young adult novels. She graduated
from the University of Iowa in 1930 with a bachelor's degree in
English. After co-writing a nationally syndicated column in the
late 1950s, Eyerly later wrote eighteen novels for young adults,
in which the subject matter was ahead of its time - high school
drop-outs, abortion, suicide, divorce, and alcoholism. Her work
in the public policy arena for treatment of mental illness in Iowa
has changed the face of how services are delivered and the stigma
attached to mental illness. Following the Community Mental Health
Center Act of 1963, Eyerly began a grassroots effort in Des Moines
to establish an alternative to hospital care for mental illness.
Her dogged determination led to the 1969 establishment of the Polk
County Mental Health Center, of which she was a founding member.
It was renamed the Eyerly-Ball Community Mental Health Services
in 1995 to honor her work. She also is a former member of the Iowa
Commission for the Blind and past president of the Des Moines Child
Guidance Center. She was born on June 7, 1908 in Topeka, Kansas.
She was married 65 years to the late Frank Eyerly, managing editor
of The Des Moines Register and Tribune and is the mother
of two daughters. She has six grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren.She
was inducted into the Iowa Women's Hall of Fame in 2006.